Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My goodness, someone has an ax to grind. One would think you come across quite jealous… maybe because you can’t afford it?
My goodness, someone has an ax to grind. One would think you come across as someone with buyer's remorse… maybe because not everyone who can afford it thinks it would be money well spent?
NP but most people who don’t think it’s money well spent don’t come on dcum to rip on others who do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My goodness, someone has an ax to grind. One would think you come across quite jealous… maybe because you can’t afford it?
My goodness, someone has an ax to grind. One would think you come across as someone with buyer's remorse… maybe because not everyone who can afford it thinks it would be money well spent?
Anonymous wrote:My goodness, someone has an ax to grind. One would think you come across quite jealous… maybe because you can’t afford it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like on average 4 graduates a year (out of a typical class of 115) get into an Ivy. Yea, that's worth $45k.
yup and I'll bet on average 2-3 of those are girl's lax players.
I cannot believe I’m on here correcting this because the attacks on St Stephens college list are so ridiculous, BUT…
Around 5% of the graduating class (looking at last 5 years) goes to an Ivy, Stanford, or MIT
Around 10% goes to Williams, Georgetown, John’s Hopkins, and similar top private schools
Around 20-25% goes to UVA, William and Mary, or other top public schools
The rest go to a mix of solid colleges and universities.
No one is going to argue that this compares to Sidwell, where something like 18% of kids go to an Ivy. But not all of us want an academically intense experience for our kids. And of course St Stephens sends more kids to top colleges than a local public school, mostly because the population of kids is richer.
this is bullshit. these numbers don't match the information the school releases.
I truly don't understand why you care though? Do your kids go to school there? Sounds like they don't. So who cares how good or bad another school that your kids don't even go to is?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like on average 4 graduates a year (out of a typical class of 115) get into an Ivy. Yea, that's worth $45k.
yup and I'll bet on average 2-3 of those are girl's lax players.
I cannot believe I’m on here correcting this because the attacks on St Stephens college list are so ridiculous, BUT…
Around 5% of the graduating class (looking at last 5 years) goes to an Ivy, Stanford, or MIT
Around 10% goes to Williams, Georgetown, John’s Hopkins, and similar top private schools
Around 20-25% goes to UVA, William and Mary, or other top public schools
The rest go to a mix of solid colleges and universities.
No one is going to argue that this compares to Sidwell, where something like 18% of kids go to an Ivy. But not all of us want an academically intense experience for our kids. And of course St Stephens sends more kids to top colleges than a local public school, mostly because the population of kids is richer.
this is bullshit. these numbers don't match the information the school releases.
It’s literally on their website, though they don’t describe it this way because the ranking is obnoxious.
right here it is: https://www.sssas.org/academics/college-counseling. No way 35-40% go to schools like UVA, similar or better. so BS comment stands.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like on average 4 graduates a year (out of a typical class of 115) get into an Ivy. Yea, that's worth $45k.
yup and I'll bet on average 2-3 of those are girl's lax players.
I cannot believe I’m on here correcting this because the attacks on St Stephens college list are so ridiculous, BUT…
Around 5% of the graduating class (looking at last 5 years) goes to an Ivy, Stanford, or MIT
Around 10% goes to Williams, Georgetown, John’s Hopkins, and similar top private schools
Around 20-25% goes to UVA, William and Mary, or other top public schools
The rest go to a mix of solid colleges and universities.
No one is going to argue that this compares to Sidwell, where something like 18% of kids go to an Ivy. But not all of us want an academically intense experience for our kids. And of course St Stephens sends more kids to top colleges than a local public school, mostly because the population of kids is richer.
this is bullshit. these numbers don't match the information the school releases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why LOL? Do you think that there are no high achieving students whose parents can’t afford 30,000+ per year? Or do you think non-Catholics apply to a Catholic school don’t have to have a better ‘application’ than Catholic students?
not PP but we all know the BI acceptance rate is over 87%.
And your point is….
All of PVI, BI and DJO are really good high schools. BI is 25-30% smaller than the other two, so is probably weaker in sports. I think they are all of close quality educationally, just serving different geographies. They generally produce well rounded, college-ready kids.
SSSAS is probably a bit more UMC, but is also a really nice place. We looked at both schools and liked both a lot. Ended up at SSSAS for robotics but we’re impressed with BI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like on average 4 graduates a year (out of a typical class of 115) get into an Ivy. Yea, that's worth $45k.
yup and I'll bet on average 2-3 of those are girl's lax players.
I cannot believe I’m on here correcting this because the attacks on St Stephens college list are so ridiculous, BUT…
Around 5% of the graduating class (looking at last 5 years) goes to an Ivy, Stanford, or MIT
Around 10% goes to Williams, Georgetown, John’s Hopkins, and similar top private schools
Around 20-25% goes to UVA, William and Mary, or other top public schools
The rest go to a mix of solid colleges and universities.
No one is going to argue that this compares to Sidwell, where something like 18% of kids go to an Ivy. But not all of us want an academically intense experience for our kids. And of course St Stephens sends more kids to top colleges than a local public school, mostly because the population of kids is richer.
this is bullshit. these numbers don't match the information the school releases.
It’s literally on their website, though they don’t describe it this way because the ranking is obnoxious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like on average 4 graduates a year (out of a typical class of 115) get into an Ivy. Yea, that's worth $45k.
yup and I'll bet on average 2-3 of those are girl's lax players.
I cannot believe I’m on here correcting this because the attacks on St Stephens college list are so ridiculous, BUT…
Around 5% of the graduating class (looking at last 5 years) goes to an Ivy, Stanford, or MIT
Around 10% goes to Williams, Georgetown, John’s Hopkins, and similar top private schools
Around 20-25% goes to UVA, William and Mary, or other top public schools
The rest go to a mix of solid colleges and universities.
No one is going to argue that this compares to Sidwell, where something like 18% of kids go to an Ivy. But not all of us want an academically intense experience for our kids. And of course St Stephens sends more kids to top colleges than a local public school, mostly because the population of kids is richer.
this is bullshit. these numbers don't match the information the school releases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why LOL? Do you think that there are no high achieving students whose parents can’t afford 30,000+ per year? Or do you think non-Catholics apply to a Catholic school don’t have to have a better ‘application’ than Catholic students?
not PP but we all know the BI acceptance rate is over 87%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like on average 4 graduates a year (out of a typical class of 115) get into an Ivy. Yea, that's worth $45k.
yup and I'll bet on average 2-3 of those are girl's lax players.
I cannot believe I’m on here correcting this because the attacks on St Stephens college list are so ridiculous, BUT…
Around 5% of the graduating class (looking at last 5 years) goes to an Ivy, Stanford, or MIT
Around 10% goes to Williams, Georgetown, John’s Hopkins, and similar top private schools
Around 20-25% goes to UVA, William and Mary, or other top public schools
The rest go to a mix of solid colleges and universities.
No one is going to argue that this compares to Sidwell, where something like 18% of kids go to an Ivy. But not all of us want an academically intense experience for our kids. And of course St Stephens sends more kids to top colleges than a local public school, mostly because the population of kids is richer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like on average 4 graduates a year (out of a typical class of 115) get into an Ivy. Yea, that's worth $45k.
yup and I'll bet on average 2-3 of those are girl's lax players.
Anonymous wrote:Looks like on average 4 graduates a year (out of a typical class of 115) get into an Ivy. Yea, that's worth $45k.